16.3.3 Discussion

The exec function in Perl is a direct interface to
the execlp(2) syscall, which replaces the
current program with another, leaving the process intact. The program
that calls exec gets wiped clean, and its place in
the operating system's process table is taken by the program
specified in the arguments to exec. As a result,
the new program has the same process ID ($$) as
the original program. If the specified program couldn't be run,
exec returns a false value and the original
program continues. Be sure to check for this.

As with system (see Recipe 16.2), an indirect object identifies the program to
be run:

exec { '/usr/local/bin/lwp-request' } 'HEAD', $url;

The first real argument ('HEAD' here) is what the
new program will be told it is. Some programs use this to control
their behavior, and others use it for logging. The main use of this,
however, is that exec called with an indirect
object will never use the shell to run the program.

If you exec yourself into a different program,
neither your END blocks nor any object destructors will be
automatically run as they would if your process actually exited.

16.3.4 See Also

The exec function in Chapter 29 of
Programming Perl, and in
perlfunc(1); your system's
execlp(2) manpage (if you have it); Recipe 16.2